In message <877h6w9emi....@nemi.mork.no>, =?utf-8?Q?Bj=C3=B8rn_Mork?= writes: > JORDI PALET MARTINEZ <jordi.pa...@consulintel.es> writes: > > > I will like to know, from those deploying IPv6 services to residential > > customers, if you are planning to provide static or dynamic IPv6 prefixes. > > > > Just to be clear, I'm for static prefix delegation to residential > > customers, however I heard that some ISPs are doing dynamic delegations, > > the same way as is common today with IPv4. > > > > I don't thin it make sense, as the main reason for doing so in IPv4 was > > address exhaustion and legacy oversubscription models such as PPP/dial-up. > > We will do "semi-static" PD for residential users. In practice most > users will see this as static, but we may reallocate users if necessary > to preserve aggregation. > > One point I often miss in the endless discussions wrt dynamic/static > IPv6 with references to the dynamic IPv4 world, is the lack of RFC1918 > addressing for IPv6. The fact is that all residential users are used > to, and depend on, static IPv4 addressing within their own network. > They assign e.g. 192.168.5.5 to their printer and 192.168.5.6 to their > NAS, and trust that those addresses are static. > > Now moving to IPv6, their choices are either link local or a static > delegated prefix. Link local will of course work and be completely > static for a given device, but does have a couple of drawbacks which I > believe will make most users want a static global prefix instead: > - ugly addresses, often not configurable > - the need to specify outgoing interface on any PC/whatever you want to > talk to the link local addresss > > For this reason, I argue that residential users are used to static IPv4 > addresses and will demand static IPv6 addresses. The fact that their > globally routed IPv4 address is dynamic is completely irrelevant as long > as a similar mechanism isn't available for IPv6 (no, I won't mention > NAT66).=20
en1: flags=8863<UP,BROADCAST,SMART,RUNNING,SIMPLEX,MULTICAST> mtu 1500 ether 60:33:4b:01:75:85 inet6 fe80::6233:4bff:fe01:7585%en1 prefixlen 64 scopeid 0x5 inet 192.168.191.223 netmask 0xffffff00 broadcast 192.168.191.255 inet6 fd92:7065:b8e::6233:4bff:fe01:7585 prefixlen 64 autoconf inet6 2001:470:1f00:820:6233:4bff:fe01:7585 prefixlen 64 autoconf media: autoselect status: active Note the multiple prefixes. IPv6 is not just IPv4 with bigger addresses. If you want to give your printers, etc. stable IPv6 addesses use ULAs. > Bj=C3=B8rn > -- Mark Andrews, ISC 1 Seymour St., Dundas Valley, NSW 2117, Australia PHONE: +61 2 9871 4742 INTERNET: ma...@isc.org